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Botanical Culture of Cannibal Flower

Flower language Can't get, have to destroy.

Love every day as if it were the end of the world. In the tropical forests of Panama, there is also a "man-trapping vine" that resembles a cypress. If you accidentally touch the cane, it will be like a python to tightly wrap people until strangled. In the forests of Brazil, there is also a shrub called Yanipinda, whose branches are reportedly covered with sharp barbs. If a person or animal touches this tree, the barbed branches swarm around the person or animal and stab them. It is difficult to get out of this predicament without the help of others.

The sensationalism of the reports made it impossible for botanists to remain indifferent, and in 1971 an expedition of South American scientists penetrated the island of Madagascar to conduct extensive research in areas rumored to be home to cannibalistic trees, but came up empty-handed. Many people take a positive view of cannibalistic plants. It is well known that there are plants that are sensitive to light, sound, and touch, such as the sunflower to the sun, the leaves of the acacia tree that open in the morning and close at night, and the mimosa that responds to touch. It has also been discovered that plants also have a sense of taste, pain, and even sing. Extrapolating from this, the existence of cannibalistic plants is not out of the question.